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Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Ned and Barb Fleming (Bryan Cranston and Megan Mullally) were invited by their daughter Stephanie (Zoey Deutch) to spend the holidays with her in Stanford. It turns out that her daughter is already moving in with her crude billionaire boyfriend Laird (James Franco). Laird tries his best to impress the Flemings but Ned feels that Laird isn't the appropriate partner for her daughter. Soon, when Laird asks for Ned's blessing to marry Stephanie's things get a bit tougher when as Ned feels Laird's presence is actually tearing his family apart.

Why Him isn't the first of its kind, but it sure does know how to deliver comedy on the right spot. James Franco once again brings his comical talent in what he always does best and now pairs with the brilliant Bryan Cranston, who answers the challenge. The casting was perfect as the two basically knows how to throw the punch lines on the right moment which made the film extremely funny throughout.

The film might have tons of vulgar words and a lot cussing, but we didn't find it offensive and we laugh a lot every time James Franco disses. We loved its supporting cast who also made the film more interesting. Megan Mullally had one of the best scenes in the film, and she definitely gave her all to make it work. Griffin Gluck
also did a terrific job as the youngest member of the Flemmings. It is just a bit awful to see Zoey Deutch sidelined as she might be the center of attraction, but she wasn't utilized well enough for her to leave a mark.

Overall, Why Him is another classic raunchy comedy entry from James Franco. If you love his humor, then this film is a must watch for you and your friends. It may be a late film that is due to a holiday release, but it is still a perfect present for those who want to watch a stress reliever flick this week.

The
main poster for Paramount Pictures' suspense thriller Rings,
has just been released – showing the malevolent female ghost
emerging from the haunted TV set. The ominous tagline “Evil is
Reborn” hints at a new beginning.

Rings is
a new chapter in the beloved RING horror franchise.
A young woman (Matilda Lutz) becomes worried about her boyfriend
(Alex Roe) when he explores a dark subculture surrounding a
mysterious videotape said to kill the watcher seven days after he has
viewed it. She sacrifices herself to save her boyfriend and in doing
so makes a horrifying discovery: there is a “movie within the
movie” that no one has ever seen before…

Monday, January 30, 2017

Known
wordwide as Havok in X-Men: First Class and X-Men:
Apocalypse, Lucas Till now headlines Paramount
Pictures' new family adventure Monster Trucks.

Looking
for any way to get away from the life and town he was born into,
Tripp (Till), a high school senior, builds a Monster Truck from bits
and pieces of scrapped cars. After an accident at a nearby
oil-drilling site displaces a strange and subterranean creature with
a taste and a talent for speed, Tripp may have just found the key to
getting out of town and a most unlikely friend.

At
the start of the film, Till's character, Tripp, is trying to get away
from, in his mind, a crappy life. “He wants to go find his dad and
get away from his mom, his step-dad really, and then he goes to find
out that what he’s searching for isn’t what he really thought it
was going to be. But the whole time he’s trying to get from point A
to point B, he really just wants an engine for his truck, then he
finally gets one and it doesn’t work out and then the monster turns
out to be exactly what he needs. His intention with the monster
starts out a little selfish, and then it gets to the point that it’s
all about saving the monster.”

Asked
what makes Tripp the right person to save Creech, the monster, Till
replies “I think it’s because he’s definitely not the
quintessence of a caring person in the beginning, and then he
transforms, and I think that’s why it works.

Reflecting
on Tripp's relationship with Creech, the actor elaborates, “This is
more like little brother, big brother who don’t have the best
relationship with each other in the beginning and then afterwards
they certainly do by the end. Tripp doesn’t coddle him very much.
He actually kind of cracks a whip on him like, ‘Get to work. This
is my truck. You’re my engine now.’ But then obviously, lit
develops into much more than that.”

Lucas
Till was born on August 10, 1990. As a child, Lucas had a gift for
impressions and was encouraged to pursue performing. After working on
various independent films, he landed the role of Young Jack Cash in
James Mangold’s Walk the Line. Till then portrayed Miley Cyrus’
love interest in Disney’s Hanna Montana: The Movie, which led
producer Neil Moritz to cast him as a young private in Sony’s
Battle Los Angeles.

It
was his turn playing the mutant Havok in the X-Men film series that
established Till as one of Hollywood’s most promising leading men.
Till joined a cast led by James McAvoy, Jennifer Lawrence and Michael
Fassbender in director Matthew Vaughn’s audience and critical hit
X-Men: First Class. The film revitalized the franchise and spawned
the films X-Men: Days of Future Past and X-Men: Apocalypse.

Opening
across the Philippines on February 1, Monster Trucks is
distributed in the Philippines by United International Pictures
through Columbia Pictures.

A
returning ally and a new comrade. Joining Milla Jovovich in Columbia
Pictures' action-thriller Resident Evil: The Final Chapter are Ali
Larter and William Levy who play survivors of the zombie apocalypse.
They reinforce Alice (Jovovich) where the nightmare began – The
Hive in Raccoon City, where the Umbrella Corporation is gathering its
forces for a final strike.

Larter
is back as Claire Redfield who “had a crash and now she’s become
part of this last group of survivors. That’s when Alice comes in
and she cannot believe that’s she been reunited with her”, says
Larter, adding that her character has been fighting for her life
since the third film in the franchise, Resident Evil: Extinction.

“My
character has undergone a lot of personal development over the course
of the series, and that was really interesting for me. She really
wants to believe, she wants to connect, she wants to be able to feel
something but there's never time because she is always being hunted.”

As
she approaches the end of the franchise, how does Larter look back at
the whole experience of having been a part of it? “I am very proud
to have been in three films of the Resident Evil series,” she
assures. “And it’s exciting that the fans connect with the
character of Claire Redfield and reach out to me. I feel really lucky
to have been a part of it.”

Cuban-American
actor, William Levy, joins the Resident Evil family as Christian, one
of the militant survivors working with Claire’s group. Levy
describes his character. “He has a very strong personality, he
doesn't trust anybody. He shoots first and asks questions later. He's
willing to do whatever it takes to save the survivors, to save them
all, including giving his life.”

Levy
discusses his attraction to the project. “The story is always going
to reach different audiences, and I didn’t have to think twice
about being part of something as amazing as Resident Evil. I viewed
all the previous movies and saw how good they were and when I read
the Final Chapter script I knew it was going to be a better movie, in
every way. I needed to be part of this.”

Speaking
of the new faces in the franchise, Larter says, “William brought
some spice, flare and passion to the movie. He is a huge star in
Latin America, and it was great to have him on board. And he works
hard, is a really cool guy and a dad.”

Asked
what should the audience be looking forward to the film, Levy says,
“A very exciting movie with a new look, new weapons, new vehicles,
new zombies and a lot of cool stuff in it. And the locations are just
spectacular! We shot in South Africa in the most amazing places, like
this abandoned highway that I’m sure will look great on screen. I
think people are going to really enjoy the film!”

Resident
Evil: The Final Chapter, marks the sixth and final installment in the
astoundingly successful film franchise adaptation of Capcom’s
hugely popular video game series, having grossed over $1billion
worldwide to date and being the most successful video game film
franchise ever.

Opening
across the Philippines on February 1, Resident Evil: The Final
Chapter is distributed by Columbia Pictures, the local office of Sony
Pictures Releasing International.

Comedian
Will Arnett who voices The Dark Knight in Warner Animation
Group's The LEGOBatman Movie took time
to greet Filipino fans as he invited them to watch the new comedy
adventure.

“Kumusta,
Philippines!,” says Arnett at the start of the video, and after
introducing himself, deadpans “I have to say that never in my life
that I'd ever dreamed I'd be starring in my own Batman film.”

Check
out the video below and
watch the film when it opens in Philippine cinemas on Thursday,
February 9, 2017.

In
the irreverent spirit of fun that made The LEGO® Movie a
worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble
– LEGO Batman – stars in his own big-screen adventure. But there
are big changes brewing in Gotham, and if he wants to save the city
from The Joker’s hostile takeover, Batman may have to drop the lone
vigilante thing, try to work with others and maybe, just maybe, learn
to lighten up.

Will
Arnett reprises his starring role from The LEGO Movie as
the voice of LEGO Batman, aka Bruce Wayne. Zach Galifianakis
(theHangover films) stars as The Joker; Michael Cera
(Superbad) as the orphan Dick Grayson; Rosario Dawson
(TV’s Daredevil) as Barbara Gordon; and Ralph Fiennes
(the Harry Potter films) as Alfred.

The
LEGO® Batman Movie is directed by Chris McKay, and produced
by Dan Lin, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, and Roy Lee, who worked
together on The LEGO Movie.

The
LEGO Batman Movie is distributed in the Philippines by
Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

The
Chinese New Year on January 28 marks the beginning of the Year of the
Red Fire Rooster. Feng shui experts say it is going to be a Yin
year—a time best spent in harmony with friends and family.

What
better time, then, to create happy moments with these special people
than on Chinese New Year, itself—a festive day of colorful rituals
and exotic traditions that celebrate a brand-new lunar year.

Take
the perfect selfie this Chinese New Year with the Vivo V5 Plus, the
latest Vivo unit, equipped with the world’s first 20-megapixel dual
front camera.

With
exciting events highlighting the grand occasion, expect revelers to
immortalize these with endless selfies. And to take the selfie game
to the next level, top five premium global brand Vivo brings us the
Vivo V5 Plus, the smartphone equipped with the world’s first
20-megapixel dual front camera and advanced selfie technology.

With
the perfect selfie phone, and these perfect selfie tips from Vivo,
taking photos on Chinese New Year will surely be a breeze:

Always
look your best when taking your selfie with the help of Vivo V5 Plus’
face beauty mode 6.0, a built-in camera tool able to enhance skin
tone and remove blemishes.

• Find
your perfect angle. Some of us look
better photographed from the left, some from the right, some from
above. Before heading out to the Chinese New Year festivities, find
the angle that suits you best by practicing at home. A fool-proof
tip: Avoid take selfies from below—definitely not a good angle for
anybody.

• Consider
your photo’s background. Vivo V5 Plus
features a true ‘bokeh’ effect, beautifully blurring your
selfie’s background while your face remains in focus. Now, having a
‘bokeh’ effect does not mean disregarding your background
altogether. In fact, it is even better to take advantage of it.

Your
selfies are guaranteed to look great with the bokeh effect of the
Vivo V5 Plus, a photography filter that blurs backgrounds and keeps
the details of the object in focus sharp and clear.

For
instance, create a beautiful blur of all the red and gold during
Chinese New Year celebrations by choosing the best selfie background.
Although Vivo V5 Plus has ‘bokeh’ power, you don’t want to take
a selfie with your cluttered closet as the background.

• Lighting
is everything. Lighting affects the
mood of your pictures. For example, dull or poor lighting makes
pictures look gloomy—and you don’t want that for a Chinese New
Year selfie. Luckily, Vivo V5 Plus features a selfie soft light,
which enables users to take sharp and beautiful selfies even in poor
lighting conditions.

• Look
your best. Welcome the Chinese New Year
with a bang by making an effort to look good. In order to achieve a
perfect selfie, everything must be on point—the hair, the face,
even the attire. Achieve the perfect look with Vivo V5 Plus face
beauty mode 6.0, which will make you look fresh by enhancing your
skin tone without the need for editing or filter.

Photo
lighting will surely complement your selfies well with the Vivo V5
Plus selfie soft light, designed to adjust the lighting of your
photo, even in the dark.

• It’s
okay to use a selfie stick. A selfie
stick is a pole with a grip at the end, designed to hold your
smartphone when taking selfies. Selfie sticks are perfect for
celebrations when you want to capture more people and more details.
Bring a selfie stick on Chinese New Year to take better selfies of
all the festivities happening around you.

• Make
your selfie unique. Some people prefer
selfies that look formal and sophisticated, while others like a touch
of goofiness every now and then. Whatever your choice is, make sure
you are comfortable and having fun. Make your selfie your own, and
begin the year of the Red Fire Rooster by being yourself!

This
Chinese New Year, take the perfect selfie the easy way with the Vivo
V5 Plus perfect selfie phone. For inquiries about Vivo V5 Plus, visit
the Vivo website at vivoglobal.ph, or check out their Facebook
(https://www.facebook.com/VivoPhil), Instagram
(https://www.instagram.com/vivophil/), and Twitter
(https://twitter.com/vivophil) accounts. #

Friday, January 27, 2017

William and Tovar (Matt Damon and Pedro Pascal) are the last remaining men in their group who are set to find a powerful gun powder in the Far East. While fleeing from the hilltop bandits the two were captured at one of the main outposts of the great wall where an army is preparing for a battle. They learn that there are dangerous creatures who are attacking the wall, and the army needs to protect it from reaching the other side. Soon, William must decide whether he will join the fight or just finish his first task and go back home.

The Great Wall has a very interesting idea about making another story about the walls. The structure of the story is pretty generic and way too predictable, but the delivery is simply neat and enjoyable from start to finish. The costumes are scintillating with vibrant colors that look lively on the screen plus the action scenes are dope and impressive. In short, the film is visually stunning throughout and an epic representation of innovative warfare between humans and monsters.

This is all made possible by the slick director in Zhang Yimou, who creates a creative spectacle that simply entertains the audience and never had a dull moment. Although there are some scenes that feel a bit exaggerated. The stars did well with Matt Damon carrying the load behind his back. He shows that he still one of the most versatile actors in this era. Pedro Pascal also made a mark and showed that he can keep up with Matt Damon. They are both fun to watch and an awesome combination to make the film more interesting. Their Asian counterparts also didn't disappoint with the veteran Andy Lau and a very beautiful Tian Jing rounding up the cast.

Overall, The Great Wall succeeds in bringing in an engaging popcorn cinematic experience with the battle scenes alone are already worth of admission.

Paramount
Pictures' new family adventure Monster Trucks centers
on young, smalltown hero, Tripp (Lucas Till) and a strange, `monster'
appropriately named Creech, one of an undiscovered species of
oil-consuming underground sea creatures.

The
film presented several challenges in bringing Creech to life, with
the use of computer-generated imagery.

Director
Chris Wedge shares, “The concept of our movie, in case it hasn’t
occurred to you, is really silly. It’s just big and fun, and I
wanted to make the contrast between reality and our monster as crisp
as I could. I wanted to ground the live-action, I wanted to ground
the movie. So I set it in this North Dakota boom town, and I put a
kid that was down on his luck in a gritty junkyard, and I wanted the
creature to seem as real as I could, but as impossible as I could. So
we used reference from everything—from an octopus to a walrus to a
seal and a beluga whale.

“And
I wanted it to emote like an animal, not like a character,”
continues the director. “It has the range of expression that maybe
your dog does. I knew it was all going to be in the eyes. I wanted
the limbs to all feel heavy and labored under gravity in the world,
so everything that he did when he was out of the water was difficult
and I wanted to convey that. You got most of it from his attitude,
from his head poses, and the expression you get from his eyes.

On
top of that, a lot of emotion comes from the truck itself, which
Creech has took possession of.

“I
always thought that the truck was a character,” says Wedge. “And
it’s the thing that results from this kid and this creature in this
truck that he built. So the idea was that this weird creature comes
squirting out of the ground. He’s as helpless on land as an octopus
is. But when you put him into this shell of a truck in a certain way
it becomes a super suit for him. So he can move really fast, he can
hide in it and it protects him, but it can also move in unexpected
ways. And that’s what I wanted to convey. And because the film is a
fun, big family adventure, I wanted it to look like it was having
fun.”

With
Creech inside the truck, the vehicle's going to look alive. “I
wanted it to move the way that it might when you’d take your little
Matchbox or Hot Wheels car when you were a kid, and you were running
it around the kitchen table or over the arm of your sofa,” Wedge
exclaims. “You could make it jump and go, ‘Zoom, zoom!’ That’s
how I wanted the truck to move.”

Looking
for any way to get away from the life and town he was born into,
Tripp (Till), a high school senior, builds a Monster Truck from bits
and pieces of scrapped cars. After an accident at a nearby
oil-drilling site displaces a strange and subterranean creature with
a taste and a talent for speed, Tripp may have just found the key to
getting out of town and a most unlikely friend.

Melding
cutting edge visual effects and state-of-the-art CGI, Monster
Trucks is an action filled adventure for the whole family
that will keep you on the edge of your seat and ultimately touch your
heart.

Opening
across the Philippines on February 1, Monster Trucks is
distributed in the Philippines by United International Pictures
through Columbia Pictures.

Ryan
Coogler (“Creed,” “Fruitvale Station”) directs Marvel
Studios’ “Black Panther” from a screenplay he co-wrote with Joe
Robert Cole (“The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”).
The film, which opens in Philippine theaters on February 2018, will
be shot in Atlanta and South Korea.

“Black
Panther” follows T’Challa who, after the events of “Captain
America: Civil War,” returns home to the isolated, technologically
advanced African nation of Wakanda to take his place as King.However,
when an old enemy reappears on the radar, T’Challa’s mettle as
King and Black Panther is tested when he is drawn into a conflict
that puts the entire fate of Wakanda and the world at risk.

Based
on the Marvel comic character that first appeared in “Fantastic
Four Vol. 1” Issue 52, published in 1966, “Black
Panther” joins Marvel Studios’ slate
of releases in its Phase 3 commitment to introduce film audiences to
new heroes and continue the adventures of fan favorites over the
course of four years and nine films.

In
2016, Marvel Studios continued its unprecedented success with the
release of “Captain America: Civil War,” which opened on May
6 with the fifth largest opening weekend of all time and has
since garnered box office receipts of over $1.1 billion worldwide.

The
juggernaut studio ended the year with its newest Super Hero “Doctor
Strange,” starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Chiwetel Ejiofor and
Rachel McAdams. The film opened #1 at the box office on November
4 and went on to gross more than $659 million worldwide to date.
The two films propelled Marvel Studios’ #1 domestic box-office
opening streak to a record-breaking 14 consecutive films.

Without
contest, one of the strongest assets in the Resident Evil film series
is its principal actor, Milla Jovovich, now reprising her role as
Alice for the sixth and final time in Resident Evil: The Final
Chapter.

Over
the course of the series Alice has faced impossible odds and survived
the evil forces of the Umbrella Corporation as the last savior of
mankind.

Jovovich
and her character have become icons of the action/sci-fi genre.
Resident Evil: The Final Chapter bids this character farewell in the
most ambitious and spectacular impression yet. Through the film’s
twists and turns fans will find closure as the narrative returns to
the source of the T-virus.

“This
has been a really incredible experience filming the last chapter
because we get to go back to the beginning, to The Hive, where
everything began and see it in a completely different way,” says
Jovovich adding, “I know for Paul it’s been really exciting,
because you get to delve much more into the original locations and
the original story and go behind all of that. I think it will be
really exciting for the fans as well, because they really get to see
all the stories, all the questions that the first movie presented
we’re answering in this one.”

Alice
has undergone a tumultuous journey since starting the series as an
amnesiac in the first film. “In this movie Alice has pretty much
come into herself, and she's really grown in to this strong warrior.
I think in so many of the other movies she was looking for herself.
In the first one she couldn't remember anything and in the second
she's fighting with whatever substance they have injected into her;
who is she becoming; is she a monster; is she human, or not? Jovovich
continues, “that is the theme that was carried through the next few
movies; Alice fighting Umbrella and what they've done to her
medically. Does she have powers? Does she not? How does she control
them? She’s never been sure about who she is as a person and now I
feel she has really become whatever she's become. She's not
questioning it and she does not doubt anymore. Her philosophy is, ‘I
am who I am! Go to hell if you don't like it!' I like that about her
because I think it’s important to be happy with who you are, no
matter what. To have the confidence and to have that strength is
inspiring, and this time she's really found herself.”

Being
an integral part of the making of the entire movie franchise over 15
years has made Resident Evil an intrinsic part of Jovovich’s life
on a personal as well as working level. “Through it all I've met my
husband, the father of my children, so it’s been a family affair.
It’s sad in that sense because we feel so familiar with this story,
with this character; the crew and cast that we have worked with over
and over again, it’s going to be tough to say goodbye to Alice and
the Resident Evil franchise,” says Jovovich, adding that for her
it’s a bittersweet farewell.

Resident
Evil: The Final Chapter, marks the sixth and final installment in the
astoundingly successful film franchise adaptation of Capcom’s
hugely popular video game series, having grossed over $1billion
worldwide to date and being the most successful video game film
franchise ever.

Directed
by Paul W.S. Anderson, Resident Evil: The Final Chapter picks up
immediately after the events in Resident Evil: Retribution, in which
Alice is the only survivor of what was meant to be humanity’s final
stand against the undead. Now, she must return to where the nightmare
began – The Hive in Raccoon City, where the Umbrella Corporation is
gathering its forces for a final strike against the only remaining
survivors of the apocalypse.

Opening
across the Philippines on February 1, Resident Evil: The Final
Chapter is distributed by Columbia Pictures, the local office of Sony
Pictures Releasing International.

LEGO
Batman joins in the celebration of Chinese New Year in the new video
that's just been released by Warner Animation Group to promote The
LEGO Batman Movie.

Check
out the featurette below and
watch the film when it opens in Philippine cinemas on Thursday,
February 9, 2017.

In
the irreverent spirit of fun that made The LEGO® Movie a
worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble
– LEGO Batman – stars in his own big-screen adventure. But there
are big changes brewing in Gotham, and if he wants to save the city
from The Joker’s hostile takeover, Batman may have to drop the lone
vigilante thing, try to work with others and maybe, just maybe, learn
to lighten up.

Will
Arnett reprises his starring role from The LEGO Movie as
the voice of LEGO Batman, aka Bruce Wayne. Zach Galifianakis
(theHangover films) stars as The Joker; Michael Cera
(Superbad) as the orphan Dick Grayson; Rosario Dawson
(TV’s Daredevil) as Barbara Gordon; and Ralph Fiennes
(the Harry Potter films) as Alfred.

The
LEGO® Batman Movie is directed by Chris McKay, and produced
by Dan Lin, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, and Roy Lee, who worked
together on The LEGO Movie. The screenplay is by
Seth Grahame-Smith and Chris McKenna & Erik Sommers and Jared
Stern & John Whittington, story by Seth Grahame-Smith, based on
LEGO Construction Toys and based on characters from DC Entertainment.
Batman was created by Bob Kane with Bill Finger; Superman was created
by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. Jill Wilfert, Matthew Ashton, Will
Allegra and Brad Lewis serve as executive producers.

The
LEGO Batman Movie is distributed in the Philippines by
Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

Keanu
Reeves suits up and reloads as the legendary and untouchable assassin
in “John Wick: Chapter 2” following the 2014 hit of the same
title.

Guns
and ammos are relit in the high-octane action “John Wick: Chapter
2” where John Wick is brought back from retirement the second
time. After unleashing mayhem on the criminals who killed his
dog, retired super assassin John Wick retrieves his beloved 1969
Mustang from the Russian mobsters who stole it, only to be pursued in
a spectacular high-speed car chase through crowded New York City
streets. Returning home, John’s plans to resume a quiet civilian
life are cut short when Italian gangster Santino D’Antonio
(Riccardo Scamarcio) shows up on his doorstep with a gold
“marker” compelling him to repay past favors. Ordered by Winston
(Ian McShane), kingpin of secret assassin society The Continental, to
respect the organization’s ancient code, John reluctantly accepts
the assignment to take out Santino’s own sister, Gianna (Claudia
Gerini), the ruthless capo atop the Italian Camorra crime syndicate.

Reeves
says creating the sequel was a deeply collaborative effort. “John
Wick: Chapter 2 started from a script by Derek Kolstad, the writer of
the first and second films. Producer Basil Iwanyk, Chad and myself
had conversations about what direction we would like the story to go,
both before Derek started to write and after he came in with the
draft.”

The
story of “John Wick: Chapter 2” is the journey of a
complicated hit man struggling to protect the kinder, gentler self he
embraced after retiring from the business, but unable to do so
because of a debt he has accrued. “John Wick has given a marker to
this character Santino, played by Riccardo Scamarcio,” Reeves
explains. “According to the rules, if the bearer of the marker
comes to you and wants to cash it in and you don’t do what they
want, you die. If you kill the bearer of your marker, you die. So
John has a problem.”

A
man of few words, Wick flips back and forth between two states of
mind. “When John Wick fell in love, he was like, ‘I have to stop
killing people,’ but when his old life comes back at him, he
becomes like the Superman of compartmentalization. In the assassin
persona, he doesn’t feel remorse. The difference is that John Wick
used to fight for other people. And now John Wick is fighting for his
own independence.”

A
must-see action film in theatres, “John Wick: Chapter 2” opens in
cinemas nationwide on February 8 from Pioneer Films.